Cricket (1950)

ALL 11/18/1950 (en) Documentary 17 Min
  • Release
    11/18/1950
  • Production
    British Film Council, Pathé Documentary Unit
  • Rotten tomato
    0%
  • Original title
    Cricket
  • Original language
    en
  • Production Cost
  • 0.00
    -

Overview

Through the pattern of this film a ‘Test’ at Lord’s runs like a thread and a broadcast commentary on the match is imposed on the background of cricket as a game, a craft, an interest of a people, a piece of history. The craftsmen are shown who make the ball and the bat–that ‘fourth straight stick’ with which the batsmen defend ‘the other three’. The craftsmen are shown who play the game, from W. G. Grace in the ‘nets’ to D. G. Bradman and Denis Compton in the thread of the ‘Test’. The history of the game is epitomized in the Long Room shots at Lord’s and from there the camera moves to the village green; to the London side- street where the urchins play on a ‘bumping pitch’; to South Africa, and India, where in the ‘blinding light’ there is often ‘an hour to play and the last man in.

  1. Grahame Tharp

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Peter Baylis

    Producer



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Casts

  1. Ralph Richardson

    Narrator(voice)

  2. John Arlott

    Narrator(voice)

Full Cast & Crew

Casts : 2 , Crews : 8

Keyword

Cricket (1950) 17 Min

ALL 11/18/1950 (en)
Documentary
  • Release 11/18/1950
  • Production
    British Film Council, Pathé Documentary Unit
  • Original title Cricket
  • en
  • Revenue0.00

Overview

Through the pattern of this film a ‘Test’ at Lord’s runs like a thread and a broadcast commentary on the match is imposed on the background of cricket as a game, a craft, an interest of a people, a piece of history. The craftsmen are shown who make the ball and the bat–that ‘fourth straight stick’ with which the batsmen defend ‘the other three’. The craftsmen are shown who play the game, from W. G. Grace in the ‘nets’ to D. G. Bradman and Denis Compton in the thread of the ‘Test’. The history of the game is epitomized in the Long Room shots at Lord’s and from there the camera moves to the village green; to the London side- street where the urchins play on a ‘bumping pitch’; to South Africa, and India, where in the ‘blinding light’ there is often ‘an hour to play and the last man in.

  1. Grahame Tharp

    Director

  2. Story

  3. Alex Milner-Gardner

    Editor

  4. Peter Baylis

    Producer